On 08/10/15 06:23, Pascal Obry wrote:
For example, I'm using it for the Web to adjust a bit the exposure. That is moving down a bit the exposure as my calibrated display (a bit darker) will create a bit too much exposed pictures.

Pardon my delay in responding, but I thought the main reason for having a profiled display was so that you didn't have to do that?

I suspect that most devices these days can render sRGB from a JPEG pretty accurately, especially since the majority of devices now have good built-in screens and not many options for screwing up the colour rendition. Even if the accuracy isn't spectacular, I would expect it to be normally distributed around sRGB instead of being consistently brighter. Am I wrong about this?

Shouldn't you be aiming for an image on your calibrated monitor to be a pretty good match with the JPEG of that image rendered on (say) a decent tablet? OK, your monitor might have a wider gamut, so you might want to soft-proof in sRGB, but if that doesn't give you a close match, I'd suggest something is not quite right with your calibration and profiling.

Am I missing something here? Willing to be corrected.

--
David Houlder
da...@davidhoulder.com
http://davidhoulder.com

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